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College students don't spend much time studying
Joanne Jacobs, Manhattan Institute. ^
| 5/2/2025
| Joanne Jacobs, Rick Hess and Greg Fournier
Posted on 05/02/2025 2:38:26 PM PDT by george76
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1
posted on
05/02/2025 2:38:26 PM PDT
by
george76
To: george76
I was in engineering classes with dark rings around my eyes from study-related sleep deprivation. AND I paid off my studrmt loans! Eff these entitled jerks.
To: george76
Seattle Times. Nov.6, 2015 (10 years ago).
Q: How much does it cost to hire someone else to take your online class for you, with the guarantee of a B or better?
A: $1,225.15, according to the author of a disturbing article in The Atlantic about the prevalence of services that offer to help you cheat, including one called “No Need to Study.” “That extra 15 cents,” Derek Newton wrote, “made it seem official.”
NPR, 2019.
In the cat-and-mouse game of academic cheating, students these days know that if they plagiarize, they’re likely to get caught by computer programs that automatically compare essays against a massive database of other writings. So now, buying an original essay can seem like a good workaround.
“I have a friend who writes essays and sells them,” says Danielle Delafuente, another Boston University freshman. “And my other friend buys them. He’s just like, ‘I can’t handle it. I have five papers at once. I need her to do two of them, and I’ll do the other three.’ It’s a time management thing.”
3
posted on
05/02/2025 2:50:12 PM PDT
by
frank ballenger
(There's a battle outside and it's raging. It'll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls. )
To: know.your.why
4
posted on
05/02/2025 2:51:40 PM PDT
by
george76
(Ward Churchill : Fake Indian, Fake Scholarship, and Fake Art)
To: george76
Full-time students say they average 20 to 25 hours of class time and studying each week, and some estimates are even lower. Thirty-five hours a week would be a reasonable amount of time, according to traditional measures.when I was in college I had heard the rule of thumb was one hour of class is matched with three hours of outside work for studying, projects and reports. Thus a 16 hour class load would require 64 hours of total time.
5
posted on
05/02/2025 2:58:46 PM PDT
by
KarlInOhio
(May Rachel Zegler and Disney never know profits.)
To: know.your.why
I was in engineering classes with dark rings around my eyes from study-related sleep deprivation. AND I paid off my studrmt loans! Eff these entitled jerks.LOL!
This article isn't talking about college students in engineering fields. It is talking about literally everyone else.
My roommate was a mechanical engineering student in college. All he did was grind. While the rest of us, and I mean all of us, were going to bars and keg parties, he was at home studying.
6
posted on
05/02/2025 2:58:48 PM PDT
by
Drew68
(I haven’t seen the Democrats this mad since yesterday. Save some tears for tomorrow.)
To: george76
7
posted on
05/02/2025 2:58:56 PM PDT
by
Luke21
To: george76
Back in the ‘60s we guys had an excellent motivator to study hard—Selective Service.
8
posted on
05/02/2025 2:59:20 PM PDT
by
hanamizu
( )
To: george76
9
posted on
05/02/2025 3:02:56 PM PDT
by
BipolarBob
(AA told me to quit hanging around drunks. So I quit going to AA, cuz that's where they were.)
To: hanamizu
I had a friend in college who partied so hard that he flunked out. He joined the Navy but did not like being posted to Adak, Alaska.
It has always been true of many students, at least in the US (maybe less so in countries where very few people go to college), but I think it has been getting worse lately.
To: george76
I assume this only applies to those with easy majors. I don’t see how future engineers or physicians can get by on little study.
To: Angelino97
I graduated from Gonzaga 49 years ago (hard to believe). To earn my public accounting degree, I had to take 21 hours three of my last 4 semesters. That included a senior level philosophy course, which had weekly assignments that included a two page typewritten book report on books from Chesterson, Wittgenstein, etc. I was spending usually 3 hours outside of class for every hour in class.
Kept me out of trouble.
12
posted on
05/02/2025 3:13:08 PM PDT
by
Night Hides Not
(Remember the Alamo! Remember Goliad! Remember Gonzales! Come and Take It!)
To: Verginius Rufus
The idea that high school students read assigned texts aloud together in class blows my mind. We were expected to read whole books all by ourselves.
13
posted on
05/02/2025 3:13:49 PM PDT
by
hanamizu
( )
To: george76
Perhaps they struggle to read?
14
posted on
05/02/2025 3:17:41 PM PDT
by
MV=PY
(The Magic Question: Who's paying for it?)
To: george76
I started UCSD in January 1974 at age 17. 18 units the first quarter. I had already spent the Summer of 73 in a microbiology course and Judo for fun. Fall 73 was filled with English, Math, Chemistry, Judo and some other classes. I finished UCSD in June 1976 at age 19. During some quarters I took 18 units where the Provost office could see it and another 4 units via the "extension" for 22 units. One one 10 week Summer session, I completed 8 units of organic chemistry lecture and 2 units of lab. Lecture was M-F 8 AM to 4 PM. Lab T-Th 6 PM to 10 PM. Easy A focused on a single subject. Getting to campus by 7:30 AM meant being in my car by 6:30 AM for the 30 mile drive in traffic. I would leave campus by 7:30 PM to arrive home some time after 8 PM. The rush hour traffic was over by then. There was little "social life" on campus, so no distractions of that kind occurred.
I arrived on campus early in the morning because I was a physics and chemistry TA and had "sections" to support. The physics classes were self-paced requiring 100% scores on each exam. I was there to administer the exams and tutor the students to help them learn the material. I earned 2 units for being a TA and the grade was dependent on my students performance. Another easy A :-)
15
posted on
05/02/2025 3:21:58 PM PDT
by
Myrddin
To: know.your.why
“I was in engineering classes with dark rings around my eyes from study-related sleep deprivation...”
Amen! I used to take caffeine pills to stay awake in order to do the reams of work each semester!
16
posted on
05/02/2025 3:24:35 PM PDT
by
OpusatFR
To: know.your.why
I never studied graduated with a 3.9.
Spent 33 years in my chosen field now happily retired
To: know.your.why
Slept 2 hours a night in college for a BS in Biology, Worked a part time job during the school year and two fulltime jobs in the summer to pay my way through school. Worked 90 hours a week after I graduated to pay off the last of my schooling. Joined the AF at 29 to serve my country. Doesn’t seem like many work that hard today to get a good education. What a shame.
18
posted on
05/02/2025 3:29:35 PM PDT
by
Truth not Theories
(I'm so thankful that God is in control. He's the one we can trust. )
To: george76
Easily 80 hours per week, Claremont McKenna College, class of ‘84.
19
posted on
05/02/2025 3:32:19 PM PDT
by
Uncle Miltie
(My Bearded Lady neighbor is an "Intimacy Coach" from the shed w/ Palestinian & Gay flags.)
To: george76
I suspect ChatGPT will greatly cut down on the amount of effort it takes to study.
20
posted on
05/02/2025 3:35:48 PM PDT
by
dfwgator
(Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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